The Kingdom of Heaven is like a Nuclear Reactor
He's coming. Are you ready? Matthew 24:44

|Science and the Environment| |Hidden History| |Fiction| |Economics and Politics| |Psychology and Social Engineering| |Manifestos and Declarations| |History of Man's Law| |Miscellaneous| |Free Software Stuff| |Hacking| |External Links| |Religion|

This website is dedicated to the art of discovering the interesting facts and knowledge that are hidden in plain sight. Often they are hidden in things that are publicly held to be offensive, foolish, boring, or irrelevant. Things that are irrelevant usually vanish quickly, especially if they are nasty. With practice you will develop a good sense for where the interesting facts are likely to hide. Once you have the facts, the real fun starts. You get to weave them into that grand tapestry called Truth.

The presence of an article on this site is not an endorsement by the Reactor Core, it's management, or sponsors. Each article is fodder for you to use with the thinking methods of Edward de Bono, Lateral Thinking, Parallel Thinking, and Provocative Thinking, with the goal of breaking out of mental ruts and improving your critical thinking skills. The Scientific Method, Hegelian Dialectic, and Socratic Dialogue should be second nature to you.

You are in big trouble, brother. There are a lot of bad things going on in this world of ours. They hurt me. They hurt you. They hurt our parents, and our children. They come from our own bad hearts, and they are coming at us ever faster.

The bad things are curses our Father warned us about. But they will quickly go away if we do the right things. Our Father wants to bless us. Right now. With money and power. Children and wives. Good health and long life. Peace of mind and happiness.

Our problems can only be fixed by strict obedience to Jesus the Christ and the Torah of his Father, YHWH. Disobedience caused your problems. But now, like a cleansing shower, your obedience to the Law of God will allow the blood of our Savior to wash all your sins away. You are in pretty deep. You smell pretty bad. It might take a while. It is worth doing. The boat hasn't left the dock yet. You can still get on it.

Go away. Read the Torah. Learn it. Live it. Use your head. Don't jump to conclusions. The churches are filled with liars. Most of the things you think the Bible forbids, it doesn't. A few simple things you think it allows, it doesn't. Remember, Moses promised that the Law was easy enough for regular Joe to understand and obey. Paul promised that you would never go wrong if you obey God's Law.

Avoid the Amplified Version like the plague. The King James is pretty good. Study it with the help of Strong's Concordance. I like the 1560 Geneva Bible. If you don't have time to read the whole thing, at least read the first five books of the Old and New Testaments. But don't come back here for the advanced course in Kingdom Rulership until you have read all of it.

You are still here? You have absorbed God's love, and put away anger and wrathfulness? You have developed endurance, patience, long-suffering, and mildness? You don't let yourself get provoked by evil? Good. Because this website presents some very provoking things.

We are called to be rulers, beloved, and judges in the earth. We will even judge angels. So we must walk in the paths of the just. A just ruler knows his subjects, what they believe, and why they believe it. The Torah is 100% true. With that as your guide, seek wisdom. Listen carefully for knowledge. Do this everywhere. Do it always. Start here. Start now.

(Proverbs 18:13; 2Timothy 2:15; Acts 17:10-11; 1John 4:1-3)

MISCELLANEOUS

  1. The Book of the Courtier, by Count Baldessar Castilio (1528). The book that defined the "Renaissance Man". Also the definitive manual on being a gentleman for four hundred years.
  2. Cancer Caused by Diet Deficiency? Laetrile and Vitamin B-17, by Joe Vialls. An interesting thesis, worth investigating.
  3. Diesel Therapy, from Totse. If you think American law forbids torture, find out what happened to a popular Congressman who tackled corruption in the IRS.
  4. Dental Health, by Gerard F. Judd, Ph.D. Chemist reveals real causes of tooth cavities and gum problems, and extremely simple ways to prevent them.
  5. Driver Licensing vs. The Right To Travel is a legal brief claiming that it is illegal and unconstitutional for the state to require a drivers license.
  6. How To Have A Number One The Easy Way, by the Justified Ancients of Mu Mu, otherwise known as the JAMS, also known as the Timelords and the KLF, in which they describe how to make a number one hit single on the pop music charts.
  7. Invisibility and Don't Bathe!, by Anton Szandor LaVey. The three simple rules of being invisible, and the important role that bathing has in allowing empires to form.
  8. The Man Who Planted Trees, by Jean Giono. Translated by Peter Doyle. One man changed a dry wasteland into a lush paradise by planting acorns every day for fifty years.
  9. Mead Making Handbook, by Jace Crouch. The authoritative guide to making alcohol from honey.
  10. Negro Spirituals, by Thomas Wentworth Higginson (1867). Slave Songs of the United States, by William Francis Allen, Charles Pickard Ware, and Lucy McKim Garrison (1867). Eye-witness accounts of early African-American music.
  11. Reversing Shampoo, by Makoli. How shampoo harms your hair, safe alternatives, and how marketing has hidden the truth for decades.
  12. Roberts Rules of Order, by General Henry M. Robert, 1915 edition.
  13. The Travels of Marco Polo, volumes I and II, by Rusticiano of Pisa (1298). Translated by Yule (1870), edited by Cordier (1920).
  14. The Ultimate Feminist Lifestyle, by Elizabeth Joseph. A modern woman finds that Biblical polygamy is the most liberating and fulfilling lifestyle for her.
  15. The Weidner Method, by H. Hammond. Proven techniques for coping in courtrooms filled with corrupt judges and lawyers. Dynamite material for anyone who wants to represent themselves in court.
  16. What To Do If You Get Stopped By The Police contains some civics knowledge they don't teach you in school, but should.

SCIENCE AND THE ENVIRONMENT

  1. Against Excessive Skepticism, compiled by Bill Beaty. 168 quotes from the most famous and successful scientists in history, condemning skepticism.
  2. Arctic Ice And Way Of Life Melting Away For Eskimos, by Usha Lee McFarling. Wierd weather ends hunter-gatherer lifestyle on the Bering Sea, and smashes relics of mysterious civilization.
  3. Brittle Power: Energy Strategy for National Security by Amory and Hunter Lovins (1982). How secure is the oil and electrical infrastructure? Nothing has changed since it was written.
  4. Essays by Sir Arthur Keith, most important anthropologist of the 20th century.
  5. Essays by Buckminster Fuller that shaped the 20th century.
  6. Essays by Ivan Illich, Buckminster Fuller's intellectual successor.
  7. Debunking The Big Bang, by Kurt Johmann, Ph.D. 20 years of research by respected astronomer Halton Arp shows that red-shift isn't what we thought it was.
  8. Debunking The Ice Age, by Kurt Johmann, Ph.D. Science shows that glaciers never covered New York, and global warming has never led to global flooding.
  9. Early Canid Domestication: The Farm Fox Experiment, by Lyudmila N. Trut, Ph.D. (1999) Interesting results when Russian researchers set out to breed domesticated foxes.
  10. Young Elephants Run Amuck, by Rachel Lower. Rhinos turn up dead when the papa elephants are taken away.
  11. Why Oxen are Better than Horses, by the Foxearth and District Local History Society. Why do we plow with horses instead of oxen, anyway? Why did they only plow with oxen in the Bible?
  12. Inbreeding: Its Meaning, Uses and Effects on Farm Animals, by Dale Vogt, Helen A. Swartz and John Massey.
  13. The Terrible Consequences of Outbreeding, by C.T. Kleist. What does medical science say about the offspring of mixed race couples?
  14. May The Best Man Lose, by Dana Mackenzie, discusses several new mathematical methods for ensuring a fair vote.
  15. Partner of Nature, by Luther Burbank (1939). Plant breeder explains all about making hybrid plants.
  16. The Pitfalls of Radiocarbon Dating, by Emmanuel Velikovsky. The fatal flaws in archaeologies most heavily used dating method.
  17. Russia Proves "Peak Oil" is a Scam, by Joe Vialls. Scientists like Thomas Gold discovered oil is being created in unlimited quantities twelve miles beneath the earth. Russia is now making billions off that knowledge.
  18. Skeptical Environmentalist Defended, by Bjorn Lomborg. Author of the Skeptical Environmentalist responds to the unprofessional series of attacks Scientific American magazine printed against his book.
  19. Summer's Lease, by J.R. Dunn. A respected historian shows global warming has happened many times in our written history, and the results were heaven on earth. Cooling, on the other hand…
  20. Telegony, by Robert Frenz. Interesting concept in genetics explains why it is best to marry virgins.
  21. The Virtues of Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide, by Arthur Robinson (February 28, 2008). Discusses the fraud in Al Gore's popular movie, An Inconvenient Truth.

HIDDEN HISTORY

  1. America Created It's Own Money in 1750 by Charles G. Binderup, Congressman for Nebraska.
  2. The Black Nobility, by Dee Jay. Short post explaining who the black nobility were and are.
  3. Conspirators Hierarchy: The Story of the Committee of 300, by Dr. John Coleman. The book that brought Tavistock institute and the think tanks into the spot-light.
  4. The Controllers, by Martin Cannon. Are UFO abductions a cover-up for CIA mind control experiments and the MKULTRA program?
  5. Fugitive Nation: Secret History, by Michael Kolhoff. The true story of the Dismal Swamp and the origins of the Hoodoo folk religion.
  6. The Great Moon Hoax of 1835, a series of articles from the New York Sun, falsely alleged to be written by Sir John Herschel. Before NASA Mooned America, there was another moon hoax, and it also fooled many educated people, for a similar length of time.
  7. The International Jew, by Henry Ford (1920-1922). The inventor of the affordable motor car tried to figure out why Jews and Christians always hurt each other. Unlike many critics of the Jews, Ford spoke highly of the Law of Moses. This book is called anti-Semitic, mainly by people who hate the Law of Moses.
  8. Islamic Censorship - How Allah Has Nipped Your Right To Know, by Howard Bloom. The worlds oldest Imperialist power sues, harasses, and kills those who expose its history.
  9. Leaderless Resistance, by Louis Beam. This article gets a lot of visits from people at military colleges. I wonder why?
  10. Morals and Dogma of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Masonry, by Brigadier General Albert Pike (1871). The legendary secret handbook of the Freemasons.
  11. None Dare Call It Conspiracy, by Gary Allen (1971). The book that popularized the Bilderberger, CFR, Trilateral series of conspiracies. The author died in a plane crash immediately after it writing it.
  12. The Money Changers, by Patrick S. J. Carmack. One account of how modern banks originated, and how they came to control the economy and usurp the powers of governments.
  13. Proofs of a Conspiracy, by John Robison (1798). Insider exposes the workings of Freemasonry.
  14. The Prostrate State, by James Shepherd Pike (1874). For seven years, blacks ruled the Southern states of the USA. Prominent abolitionist tells the story.
  15. Silent Weapons For Quiet Wars, by Milton William Cooper. Goes into detail on the "people as cattle" concept held by societies leaders. Calls itself a "programming manual" for people.
  16. Socrates Had It Coming, by Martin Lindstedt. Socrates philosophy had much in common with Stalinism.
  17. Invention of the White Race (summary), by Theodore W. Allen. Did you know that before 1723, blacks in the United States had the vote?

FICTION

  1. 1984, by George Orwell (1949). Most famous novel of a dystopian future. Really, Orwell was describing the world he already lived in, not a future world.
  2. Anna Karenina, by Leo Tolstoy (1877). Translated by Constance Garnett (1901). Classic Russian romantic tragedy. To appreciate it, you should have been married at some point.
  3. The Brigade, by Harold Armstead Covington (2007). Novel popularizing the separation of Idaho, Washington, and Oregon into their own country. Said to be better than the Turner Diaries.
  4. Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom, by Cory Doctorow.
  5. Edward Bellamy wrote Looking Backwards, and Equality, the novels that made socialism popular.
  6. Fable of the Blackbirds and the Buzzards. The blackbirds create havoc when they listen to the evil buzzards.
  7. Fable of the Ducks and the Hens. The ducks learn an important lesson when they take in the oppressed hens.
  8. The Free and Wild Pigs of the Okefenokee Swamp, by Steve Washam, based on a telling by George Gordon.
  9. The Iron Heel, by Jack London (1907). The novel that begat the phrase.
  10. It Can't Happen Here, by Sinclair Lewis (1935). An amazingly effective piece of 1930's anti-German propaganda.
  11. Planet of Rooms, by Lorne Strider.
  12. The Republic, by Plato (~360 B.C.), translation by Benjamin Jowett (1871).
  13. Seven Short Poems, by Rudyard Kipling. Some of his best.
  14. The Smoky God, by Willis George Emerson (1908). This journalistic account convinced many people that the earth really is hollow.
  15. The Turner Diaries, by William Luther Pierce (1978). Racially conscious novel about an armed rebellion against multiculturalism. Was it the inspiration for the Oklahoma City bombings? Judge for yourself.
  16. Usura, by Ezra Loomis Pound. A beautiful poem.
  17. Utopia, by Sir Thomas More (1516), translation by Gilbert Burnet (1684).

ECONOMICS AND POLITICS

  1. The Abolition Of Work, by Bob Black. Why work when play is so much more productive?
  2. The Betrayal Of Adam Smith, by David C. Korten. Todays Capitalist system is diametrically opposed to everything the so-called Father of Capitalism, Adam Smith, advocated.
  3. Cannibals All, by George Fitzhugh (1857). How is wage slavery different from classical slavery? Spirited Confederate defense of Biblical slavery.
  4. How Superior Powers Ought To Be Obeyed By Their Subjects: And Wherein They May Lawfully By God's Word Be Disobeyed And Resisted, by Christopher Goodman (1558).
  5. Imperium, by Francis Parker Yockey, aka Ulick Varange (1948). Discover the real forces behind the rise of the European Union.
  6. In Microsoft We Trust, by Phil Lemmons. How Microsofts fortune rose as corrupt judges and lawyers dismantled the Sherman Act, and why Microsoft's monopoly convictions will not result in any effective remedies or sanctions.
  7. The Law, by Frederic Bastiat (1850). Discusses what the limits to government and the law itself should be, and how people use the law to plunder other people.
  8. The Microsoft Pyramid Scheme, by Bill Parish. An investment advisor blows the whistle on Microsofts massive income tax fraud, and other financial crimes that make Enron look as clean as a choir boy.
  9. Patent Wars, by John Trudel. How foreign and corporate interests spent the 1990's forcing through legislation that made the U.S. Patent Office unaccountable, and unable to protect small inventors.
  10. Property Rights, Human Rights, and Why Thou Shalt Not Steal, by John G. Lankford. Makes the case that Theft Is Murder.
  11. The Reproduction of Daily Life, by Fredy Perlman (1969). Without human labour to make use of them, material goods constitute neither wealth nor power.
  12. Socialism As It Was Always Meant To Be, by Michael Albert and Robin Hahnel.
  13. What Is Property? An Inquiry Into The Principle Of Right And Of Government, by Pierre-Joseph Proudhon (1840). Argues for the notion that Property Is Theft.

PSYCHOLOGY AND SOCIAL ENGINEERING

  1. Advice on Starting a Commune, by Pyotr Kropotkin. Timely advice from 100 years ago.
  2. Art of Controversy, by Arthur Schopenhauer (1860). Down and dirty debating tactics from one of the great philosophers.
  3. Propaganda, by Edward Bernays (1928). The nephew of Sigmund Freud applied his psychological theories to manipulating the masses.
  4. Rogers Rangers Standing Orders, by Colonel Robert Roger (1769). Militia tactics that work.
  5. Reality is a Shared Hallucination, by Howard Bloom. Takes the group mind/herd mentality concepts pioneered by Alduous Huxley and Adam Crabtree to their logical conclusion, in light of recent studies done at MIT.
  6. War Is The Health Of The State, by Randolph Bourne. A Pulitzer prize winning journalist, Randolph was hounded out of the journalism industry after the start of World War I for his pacifist beliefs, and articles like this one.

MANIFESTOS AND DECLARATIONS

  1. Address to the German Nation, by Johann Gottfried Fichte (1806). Short essay that kicked off German reunification, compulsory schooling, the revival of the Holy Roman Empire, Nazism, the European Union, and the Nationalist element of the Romantic movement.
  2. Manifesto of the Communist Party by Karl Marx and Frederick Engels is worth reading, to understand what many people find so seductive about this political philosophy, and what so many other people find repugnant.
  3. The Humanist Manifestos (I and II) illuminate the viewpoint that has been guiding western society for more than 500 years.
  4. Riot Act of 1714, the original Riot Act from which we got our modern expression "Read them the riot act!"
  5. The SCUM Manifesto, by Valerie Solanas (1967). This has been the agenda of the Militant Feminist movement since the 1960's.
  6. Unabomber Manifesto, allegedly by Theodore Kaczynski (1995).

HISTORY OF MAN'S LAW

Date
Entity
Document
-1680 Babylon Code of Hammurabi
-450 Rome The Twelve Tables
June 15, 1215 England Magna Carta
March 28, 1297 England Magna Carta
April 6, 1320 Scotland Declaration of Arbroath
July 26, 1581 Netherlands The Dutch Declaration of Independance
February 13, 1688 England The English Bill of Rights
June 12, 1776 United States The Virginia Declaration of Rights
July 4, 1776 United States Declaration of Independance
September 17, 1787 United States Constitution of the United States of America
March 4, 1789 United States Bill of Rights
August 26, 1789 France Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen
September, 1791 France Declaration of the Rights of Women
January 1, 1863 United States Emancipation Proclamation
December 10, 1948 United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights
August 12, 1949 United Nations Geneva Convention
November 4, 1950 Europe European Convention on Human Rights
April 17, 1982 Canada Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms
September 2, 1990 United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child
unknown United States Uniform Commercial Code

FREE SOFTWARE STUFF

  1. Apex AD-1500 ISO images, suitable for use with the UNIX cdrecord program. The regionfree ISO will make your Apex AD-1500 DVD Region Free, allowing it to play any DVD ever made. It will also disable Macrovision, and is RCE Immune. The restore ISO will restore the AD-1500 to it's original firmware, in case you need to ship the unit back for warrantee work.
  2. bot.c is a fully general IRC bot that is extremely simple to customize. It does all the necessary RFC compliant parsing of the IRC protocol; you can then insert your own functions to make the bot behave however you want.
  3. diary lets you type in a diary entry, then converts it to HTML and generates an archive of all diary entries, and a "top list" of the most recent entries. Very configurable and easy to use, written in shell and C.
  4. HOWTO Migrate to a New Hard Drive describes how you can duplicate your current system exactly on another harddrive, without having to deal with upgrades, reinstalls, repartitionings, and finding ones original installation disks.
  5. HOWTO Setup Anonymous CVS Over SSH describes a slightly different approach than the OpenBSD method for providing anonymous cvs services to users with ssh.
  6. HOWTO Secure A MOO With SSH describes how to provide encrypted access to a MOO, or any other sort of text based chat server like IRC, MUD, MUCK, or MUSH. This defeats packet sniffers that might spy on your chat connection.
  7. moo.el is a pimp tight MOO/MUD/MUCK/MUSH client with many zoomy features not found in other clients. It harnesses the power of emacs and lisp, of course.
  8. Ogg Vorbis Comment Field Recommendations specifies what tags are recommended for use in ogg files, and describes their usage. Also discusses requirements software must meet to be Standard Compliant.
  9. population.c simulates population growth or decline based on a few details that you fill in, such as fertility, initial size, and average life span of the population. It is possible to model the outcome of a wide range of birth control policies with this program. One can learn a lot about population growth by running this program with the Adam and Eve, Middle Ages, Colonial America, and modern China scenarios.
  10. pwdgen.c was originally written in PL/I for the Multics operating system in 1968. It generates secure passwords that are very English-like and pronounceable.
  11. HOWTO Configure Ratpoison documents how I configured the ratpoison window manager for X to be very comfortable to use.
  12. HOWTO Get Help on IRC, a simple set of rules that will maximize your chances of getting good help and Linux support on IRC.
  13. rot13.c and mirror.c are two simple ciphers popular on the Internet. Both have the property that if you use them to alter some text twice, you get the original text back. matrix.c will produce the original text if you apply it 4 times. It can interact with rot13 and mirror, but I leave it as an exercise for the reader how to recover text put through the matrix in conjunction with mirror and rot13.

HACKING

These were the most advanced hacking documents I could find. They assume a minimum level of competency, such as having read Bruce Schneiers book on cryptography, and a working knowledge of assembly language and Unix programming.

Hacking is seductive to the young Christian warrior, because it seems to promise quick fixes. However, it is not only useless for God's purposes, it is counterproductive. By all means, learn about it. You need to know what it is capable of, and what its limits are. Use your knowledge to protect yourself and others. Rely on God, not yourself.

  1. The Hacker's Manifesto, by The Mentor. Peer into the mind of a hacker. Do you really want to be one?
  2. Chaffing and Winnowing: Confidentiality without Encryption, by Ronald L. Rivest, co-inventor of RSA encryption.
  3. Attacking FreeBSD with Kernel Modules - The System Call Approach, by pragmatic/THC.
  4. Description of Integer Overflow, by Paul Starzetz, from a posting to BUGTRAQ.
  5. The Internet Auditing Project, by Liraz Siri, in which a small team probes every IP address on the internet, describes a breathtakingly sophisticated and advanced break-in perpetrated on them, then describes their ultra-secure internet bunker.
  6. Complete Linux Loadable Kernel Modules - the definitive guide for hackers, virus coders and system administrators, by pragmatic/THC.
  7. Hacker Crackdown: Law and Disorder on the Electronic Frontier, by Bruce Sterling.
  8. How to write Buffer Overflows, by Mudge (L0pht).
  9. In the Beginning was the Command Line, by Neal Stephenson. A well written and highly entertaining introduction to engineering philosophy for non-technical and technical people alike.
  10. An Introduction To Executing Arbitrary Code via Stack Overflows, by QuantumG.
  11. A Method of Free Speech on the Internet: Random Pads, by David A. Madore.
  12. Prime Number Hide-and-Seek: How the RSA Cipher Works, author unknown.
  13. Programming with Libpcap: a PCAP Tutorial, by Tim Carstens. Learn how to write your own custom packet sniffer!
  14. "Reply-To" Munging Considered Harmful. An Earnest Plea to Mailing List Administrators, by Chip Rosenthal.
  15. Runtime Kernel Kmem Patching, by Silvio Cesare. Everyone says this is hard, or impossible, or impractical. Silvio shows that hotpatching a running kernel is doable, and shows you how.
  16. Solaris Loadable Kernel Modules - Attacking Solaris with loadable kernel modules, by Plasmoid/THC.
  17. Smashing The Stack For Fun And Profit, by Aleph One, from Phrack Volume 7, Issue 49.
  18. Underground, by Suelette Dreyfus and Julian Assange. True tales of hacker exploits, and detailed look at the parts of hacker culture most rarely seen.
  19. Writing Internet Worms For Fun And Profit, by Michal Zalewski, describing the construction of the ultimate worm.

EXTERNAL LINKS

Everything on this page is hosted by the Reactor Core directly except the links in this section. They are all worth exploring in their own right.

  1. Amicus Curia charges $30/hour and is worth $300/hour. He is possibly the best paralegal in Washington State. He specializes in helping pro se litigants in the area of Family Law. His motto is "Helping you help yourself".
  2. An Anarchist FAQ not only discusses anarchism in detail, but explains what socialism is from its historical origins. It is as much a history book as a political document, discussing the origins of labor unions, strikes, why governments instituted welfare, and many other items of divers interest.
  3. David Hunter Thomson is a Canadian in search of Justice. He hasn't found it yet, but he has found a lot of interesting links along the way.
  4. Edward de Bono developed the revolutionary thinking techniques of Lateral Thinking, Parallel Thinking, and Provocative Thinking. As a Cambridge researcher he did seminal work on neural networks. He wrote important, but very readable work on the nature of the brain as a self-organizing system before neural nets, chaos theory, or complexity theory entered the common consciousness.
  5. Doctors for Sensible Gun Laws start with the motto of doctors everywhere: "First, do no harm". They then argue that political legislators should follow the same rule of first, doing no harm. Then they discuss what doctors have noticed about the real world benefits and harms of various types of gun laws, both allowing and disallowing.
  6. Fravia, a mysterious European, is possibly the greatest living exponent of the art of Reverse Engineering, or "reversing" as he calls it. If you know how to read between the lines, his SearchLores make the most educational reading available.
  7. John Taylor Gatto was an honored as New York State teacher of the year twice in a row. Now retired, his writing about what has gone horribly wrong with the school system is essential reading for any parent, or any person who wishes to understand how they were indoctrinated and manipulated as a child.
  8. George Gordon is a true teacher of God's Law, the Torah of YHWH as found in the Holy Bible. He teaches its practical application in everyday life, and in the court system. His success rate speaks for itself; his pupils win 95% of their court cases. Now you can also listen to the George Gordon Law Hour and Editorial Review in Ogg/Vorbis format.
  9. Paul Graham is required reading for anyone who wants to be a Good Programmer, or to write elegant, tasteful code.
  10. Libertarians for Life do a fairly good job arguing that abortion is wrong, even if you don't believe in the Bible.
  11. Marshall Hall and the Fixed Earth Small Universe exposes the Copernican deception that acted as a gateway for the Darwin evolution hoax. When the Bible says the earth is the center of the universe, it means it! Dozens of scientific proofs that allow any open-minded person to confirm for themselves that heliocentricity is a Satanic lie.
  12. Nessie Files well researched conspiracy and scare-mongering articles from a radical left-wing perspective.
  13. Daniel Quinn has written a mind-twisting series of books on the environment, humanity, and a totally different viewpoint on the past. The books are Ishmael, The Story of B, My Ishmael, and Beyond Civilization.
  14. Primitivism is the pursuit of ways of life running counter to the development of technology, its alienating antecedents, and the ensemble of changes wrought by both. This site is an exploration into primitivist theory, as well as various works that contribute to an understanding of the tendency. Has great artwork too!
  15. Rainbow Family holds a campout with more than 40,000 attending every year. It started with the hippies in the 60's, and has quietly continued in the same spirit of love ever since. Find out about the gatherings positive environmental impact and the great technology it inspired.
  16. Eric Raymond has written a flood of essential essays, FAQ's, HOWTO's, and press releases that explain and educate people about programming, hacking, Linux, and the Free Software movement.
  17. Ralph Rene has written two challenging books, "Last Skeptic of Science", "Nasa Mooned America", and many pamphlets in the tradition of Thomas Paine. You can get a little taste of Renes unique style here at the Ralph Rene Essay Collection.
  18. Soil and Health Library run by Steve Solomon, agricultural expert and gardening book author. Has important out-of-print and historical works on agriculture. Absolute must read for anyone interested in growing organic food, homesteading, being friendly to the environment, or developing self-reliance.
  19. Richard Stallman, hacker, founder of the Free Software Foundation, and inventor of Emacs, has a personal webpage filled with fascinating links.
  20. Yggdrasil tells you everything you ever wanted to know about Nationalism, the fastest spreading ideology of the coming century.

RELIGION

  1. Abortion and the Bible, by Brian Elroy McKinley. This is the strongest Bible-based case I've ever seen FOR abortion. I can refute it. Can you? You have to know your Bible well. Brian cannot be dismissed with simple handwaving.
  2. The Adverse Influence of Pork Consumption on Health, by Professor Hans-Heinrich Reckeweg, M.D. Did you know that eating pork is more dangerous than smoking cigarettes?
  3. After the Flood — the Early Post-Flood History of Europe, by Bill Cooper. Why did polytheists and atheists alike gravitate toward monotheism in ancient times? Did dinosaurs exist as recently as two hundred years ago? Did the Vikings really trace their genealogies back to Noah?
  4. [External] Commandments of YHWH website. What are the immediate benefits of obeying Jehovah's old testament laws?
  5. Calling on the Sacred Name, by Tim McHyde (May 2007). How do you pronounce the name יהוה? And why should you?
  6. Ezekiel, in the correct order. When Ezekiel was put in book form, the scrolls were jumbled out of order. It makes more sense when you read it as it was written.
  7. Ezekiel's Temple — Pre-Christian? Zionist? Millennial?, by Thomas H. Whitehouse. Is the temple in Jerusalem going to be rebuilt? This article argues it was a historical might-have-been, a covenant rejected by Israel.
  8. Faith on the March, by A.H. MacMillan (1957). Inside account of the earliest days of the Jehovah's Witnesses. Reveals what makes this militant Anabaptist group tick.
  9. First Blast of the Trumpet against the monstrous regiment of Women, by John Knox (1558). Classic anti-feminist work from the founder of the Presbyterian church. Queen Elizabeth didn't take too kindly to this essay.
  10. Health and the Mosaic Law, by Thomas H. Nelson. After reading this, you'll never want to eat swine flesh again.
  11. God's Food Laws in Today's World, by Jonathan Walther. You've taken the Pepsi challenge. Are you ready to take the Leviticus 11 challenge? You won't have to give up anything tasty.
  12. The Great Quail Controversy, by William F. Dankenbring. Exodus 16 shows us not to be too rigid in how we keep the Sabbath.
  13. [External] Hope of Israel website. John D. Keyser has a lot of great articles, especially on Lunar Sabbath keeping. You could spend weeks going through his site.
  14. Interracial Marriage in the Bible, by Harry Seabrook. If you cut away the pious hypocrisy of today's Christian's, what does the Bible really say about interracial marriage?
  15. Islam Promotes Homosexual Child Abuse, by Denise Caster. Muslims like to point fingers at Catholic priests and pedophile Jewish Rabbis, but they need to clean out their own storage locker.
  16. [External] Lunar Sabbath Info, website. Brother Arnold Bowen is a true blue Torah keeper. He wears a sword, a beard, and blue tassels, just as YHWH commanded. His humble attitude, and his explanation of the right way to observe Pentecost removed all my doubts about the lunar sabbath.
  17. Whom Did Moses Marry?, by Bertrand Comparet. Is the Hebrew word "Cushi" the same thing as "Ethiopian"?
  18. Mount Moriah, by Lambert Dolphin. True or false, Solomon built the Temple on Mount Zion?
  19. On the Jews and Their Lies, by Martin Luther (1543). Jews don't believe in Jesus. The father of the Protestant Reformation exposes their faulty reasoning.
  20. The Other End Of The World, by Roger Rusk. A sound introduction to the correct interpretation of prophecy. Its careful examination of the terms, conditions, and fine print of the covenants in the Bible is a model worthy of imitation by all students of the Word.
  21. Protocols of Zion: Genuine Forgery or Outright Fraud? A master plan to take over the world, disguised as a trashy anti-Semitic pamphlet, still raises hackles a hundred years later. What is real, what isn't?
  22. Ruth and Rahab, Who Were They?, by R. K. Phillips. Our Savior may not be descended from a Moabite or a harlot after all.
  23. Spiritual Food or Spiritual Poison?, by Pam Dewey and Norman Edwards. What criteria do you use to decide which Bible teachers to learn from? Some solid guidelines, although the authors seem to have quite a way to go in their own spiritual journeys.
  24. Sunday the First of Sabbaths, by Charles Wesley Ewing. Does the original Greek of the Gospels prove that Jesus changed the Sabbath from Saturday to Sunday? Only the Lunar Sabbatarians have addressed these verses.
  25. The Three Worlds, by E. T. Tennyson (1956). Is God going to kill all the whales?
  26. Who Was Job?, by Wordweaver. Linguistic clues identify one of the three most righteous men to have ever lived.

To add: "The Conquest of Bread", "Brain Work and Manual Work", "Mutual Aid", by Pyotr Kropotkin. "Art of War", by Sun Tzu. "Book of Five Rings", by Miyamoto Musashi. "The Prince", by Niccolo Machiavelli. "Rules for Radicals", by Saul Alinsky. "On War", by Carl von Clausewitz. "Humanure Handbook", by Joseph Jenkins. "How to Win at Poker", by Frank Wallace. "Wealth of Nations", by Adam Smith. "Das Kapital", by Karl Marx. "Mein Kampf", by Adolf Hitler.

1.
Air: from Greek pneuma and Hebrew ruach, meaning air, breathe, wind, breeze, spirit, ghost, mentality, state of mind. E.g. The home was filled with an air of contentment. The feminist walked away with a haughty air. The hall was filled with an air of excitement as the scientist prepared to present his paper.
2.
Racist: A smear term used by hate-mongers to convince white people that it is a sin for a white person to marry a white person. Also used by haters to convince white people that their genes are worthless, compared to those of the spotted owl, blue whale, snail darter, American Indian, and Australian aborigine.
3.
Propaganda: Information, not necessarily true, not necessarily false. Truth and falsehood are irrelevant to propaganda. Propaganda is information with a purpose; information created and delivered to give one a particular viewpoint, and influence ones actions. Truth gives propaganda particular potency. The Catholic church made the word popular, with its Sacra Congregatio Christiano Nomini Propagando

Glory to God, Ad Dei Gloriam

[Back to the Reactor Core]

Verily I say unto you, Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me. (Matthew 25:40)

This document is provided for reference purposes only. Statements in this document do not reflect the opinions of Reactor Core staff or the owner. If you find ought to disagree with, that is as it ought be. Train your mind to test every thought, ideology, train of reasoning, and claim to truth. There is no justice when even a single voice goes unheard. (1 Thessalonians 5:21, 1 John 4:1-3, John 14:26, John 16:26, Revelation 12:10, Proverbs 14:15, Proverbs 18:13)

Glory to God, Ad Dei Gloriam